jaybel wrote:Thats exactly what I am doing. I asked why the need for another full scan and she said no reason I do the same with everyone. I still might go ahead and get the scan but I just want a few other opinions before I go in for another full CT. It just makes it stressful when communication is poor between patient and doctor.

I may regret saying this, but many oncologists are only in it for the money, I happenned to hear 2 doctors talking in an elevator. Doctors get kickbacks on the scans .

Lungs and Airways: The central airways are patent. There is mild diffuse bronchial wall thickening keeping with bronchitis. There are scattered nodules measuring up to 4 mm including in the RIGHT lung on image 59, and LEFT lung on image 44 and 46.

No indication whether the nodules are solid, part-solid, or ground-glass which would direct follow up recommendation.

Hi all, long time lurker here... finally got to courage to post. I’m posting in this thread because I was wondering if anyone could give me some insight to my dad’s CT scan results for his lung mets. You can see from my signature at diagnosis he had multiple (10+) bilateral lung mets that were inoperable. My father is quite private so I unfortunately do not know too much about his diagnosis, other than that it is stage 4 and he is currently on a chemo regimen of 5FU and Avastin. After his first round of chemo, he had his first scan and the results were (in my dad’s words) “Lungs clear of all larger nodules...hard to see the others. Doing everything right, including excercise and weight maintenance. Will continue chemo for another 12 weeks.”

My father is tolerating chemo extremely well (some fatigue and tingles in his hands and feet), has been extremely active the entire first part of this journey (5+ miles a day of walking or biking), and has maintained a decent weight throughout (lost ten pounds initially, but bounced back up to his regular weight).

I’m just wondering... is this good news? That his nodules are disappearing? I’m assuming it is, but what should I expect? I know lung mets almost always come back. But is it typical for patients to have such a optimistic first scan? I apologize if I sound uninformed, I have never attended a doctors appointment with my father, only his chemo treatments (for reference, I’m 26 and he’s 65). Anyways, just looking for advice or experiences. Thanks!

I would think that the fact that the larger nodules are shrinking is a good sign. Shrinkage = good in all cases of cancerous/suspicious masses. It's a good thing that he is responding to the chemo especially after just one cycle, too.

Thanks for your reply and I'm sorry for sabotaging the thread! I read through some of your previous comments and I'm sorry about your husband. I do hope you figure out whether or not his lung nodules are mets (crossing my fingers for you that they are benign/inflammation). My dad did a needle biopsy, which turned out nothing, then a transbronchial biopsy, which again provided nothing, and finally a VATs biopsy which proved his were mets. Sometimes it takes a while.